Honestly all of these spying on threats options have me a bit confused, aren't we just supposed to be a research station? I would have thought that there was people whose whole job it was to find terrorists.
act Hunt - Your agents are ready to be dispatched again if you set aside the resources for them. Sasaki brings up the fact that this time, with your agents having a better grasp of what you expect them to do, they can be sent on specific missions. She has presented some options for you.
[] Wallflower - Mercury V
[] A show that, amusingly, predicted Wilde and Henry's project sixty years prior. Three young women are swept up into a wider conflict when three sentient robots crash land onto Earth. Together with the shape shifting robots, who are enforcers of galactic law, they combine their efforts against galactic criminals preying on Earth. In their struggle, they learn to rely on each other as teammates and family.
[] Robo-Jocks - So Brigadier General Peters is coming to visit again...this time with some guests in tow. Another demonstration, this time with a working prototype, is going to happen, no question. But the configuration of the Hound is unlikely to be complete before the demonstration. By Sasaki's estimates, they will be able to see just enough to show that it's in the works, but not a fully functioning prototype.
Wilde and Henry have decided to accept the challenge. That and they really, really still want a cage fight. Something the test pilot corps seem to be unusually enthusiastic about.
Also: even GGG had its own fact finding agents. GGG. Nevermind the fact it was a ninja police car robot with utterly hax abilities.
Never watched it. Wasn't it for kids or something?
In before rant incoming.
@Pred1059, GaoGaiGar isn't the only Brave series to exist. Brave Express MightGaine explicitly has the main protagonist fight toghter with an AI in the same super robot.
(Or at least that's what the translated SRW games are telling me)
I'd suggest watching it (but be careful as is one of those old shows with a lot of FLASHING LIGHTS), and while it might have been Shounen (so yeah, kind of for kids) I've heard that the show gets pretty freaking dark in it's last few episodes.
Like, both main characters fight each other in two GaoGaiGar Mechs over differing ideologies dark. (Note: I haven't seen all of it either, only like up to half of episode two because the flashing lights started making my eyes hurt, so most of my knowledge comes from SRW)
I remember watching an episode of a super robot show where the characters were also watching a super robot show themselves, quite meta. I think it's older though.
Yes. But it's by far the most popular and well known, the only Brave series (so far) with an official release, and the one more explicitly referenced by the vote. Honestly, this setup a mix of J-Decker and GaoGaiGar.
Not sure what you're trying to get at here, though....
It was also made in the wake of Evangelion, somewhat as a response to it, so there's that.Me grossly misreading your post
Also namedropping MightGaine because I recently played SRW X.
RE GaoGaiGar: It started pretty as a toyetic monster of the week show, with new machines added every episode to drive sales (Looking at you carpenters) and kinda went off the rails at the final of the first arc and escalated from there. It was still full of 80's super robot cheesiness ('The power of THE POWER!' being my favorite), but if you want a robot show with hotblooded declrations of how courage will prevail and escalating set pieces then GGG is for you.